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1 Political career  





2 Cranbury Park  





3 References  





4 External links  














Thomas Dummer







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Thomas Dummer (1739–1781) was an English Member of Parliament for Newport (Isle of Wight) (1765–1768), Yarmouth (Isle of Wight) (1769–1774), DowntoninWiltshire (1774), WendoverinBuckinghamshire (1775–1780) and LymingtoninHampshire (1780–1781).

Cranbury Park, near Winchester

Political career

[edit]

Dummer was the son of Thomas Lee Dummer. On his father's death in October 1765, he succeeded him to the family estate at Cranbury Park near Winchester, Hampshire as well as estates at Weston and Netley, near Southampton and at HorningholdinLeicestershire. He also took his father's parliamentary seat at Newport. In 1768, he lost his seat to Hans Sloane who was in the patronage of the influential Hans Stanley.[1]

In 1769, he became M.P. for nearby Yarmouth (1769–1774). Originally, the election was in favour of William Strode and Jervoise Clarke, but on petition the election was reversed in favour of Dummer and Major General the Hon. George Lane Parker.[1]

In the 1774 election, Dummer stood for election at DowntoninWiltshire. He and Thomas Duncombe were initially declared the victors, but on petition it was decided that they had not been duly elected and their opponents, John Cooper and Sir Philip Hales, were declared elected in their place.[1]

The following year, he was elected to represent WendoverinBuckinghamshire before returning to Hampshire in 1780 as M.P. for Lymington until his death in 1781.[1]

In May 1773, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[2]

Cranbury Park

[edit]
The Castle, Cranbury Park. Built from fragments of the north transept of Netley Abbey moved to Cranbury Park in the 1760s.

On his father's death in 1765, Dummer inherited the family estate at Cranbury Park. In 1770, he purchased the City Cross (also known as the Buttercross) from the Corporation of Winchester, intending to have it re-erected at Cranbury. When his workmen arrived to dismantle the cross, they were prevented from doing so by the people of the city, who "organised a small riot"[3] and they were forced to abandon their task. The agreement with the city was cancelled and Dummer erected a lath and plaster facsimile, which stood in the park for about sixty years before it was destroyed by the weather.[4]

Undaunted by his failure to acquire the City Cross to grace the estate, Dummer turned his attention to the ruins of Netley Abbey, which he also owned, and moved the north transept of the abbey to Cranbury Park, where it can be still be seen as a folly in the gardens of the house (at51°00′08N 01°21′49W / 51.00222°N 1.36361°W / 51.00222; -1.36361).[5][6] The ruins comprise an arch, the base of a pillar, and a scaled-down gateway tower. The rear of the gateway has been made into a keeper's lodge, and is known to the village of Otterbourne as "the Castle"[4] and is marked as such on the Ordnance Survey map.

Thomas Dummer died without heirs in 1781, leaving his property at Cranbury and Netley and also at HorningholdinLeicestershire first to his widow, Harriet, daughter of Sir Cecil Bishopp, 6th Baronet of Parham, with reversion to his lifelong friend Thomas Chamberlayne.[4] Harriet Dummer then married Thomas Chamberlayne, and after his death[7] she married the artist Nathaniel Dance in 1790.[8] Dance, who was later to become Sir Nathaniel Dance-Holland, Bt., was the brother of George Dance, who had designed the present-day house at Cranbury, built in 1780.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "DUMMER, Thomas (c.1739-81), of Cranbury, Hants". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  • ^ "Library and Archive Catalogue". Royal Society. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  • ^ "The Buttercross, Winchester". City of Winchester. 1998. Retrieved 23 September 2009.
  • ^ a b c Yonge, Charlotte M. (1898). "Old Otterbourne". John Keble's Parishes – Chapter 8. www.online-literature.com. Retrieved 23 September 2009.
  • ^ Thompson, A. Hamilton (1953). Netley Abbey. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. p. 22. ISBN 0-11-670020-3.
  • ^ a b Ford, Michael (1999). "History of Cranbury Park, Hampshire". The English Country House. www.britannia.com. Retrieved 23 September 2009.
  • ^ "Horninghold, Gartree Hundred" (PDF). Victoria County History of Leicestershire. Retrieved 23 September 2009.
  • ^ George Edward Cokayne, editor, The Complete Baronetage, 5 volumes (no date (c. 1900); reprint, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 1983), volume I, page 156.
  • [edit]
    Parliament of Great Britain
    Preceded by

    Thomas Lee Dummer
    William Rawlinson Earle

    Member of Parliament for Newport (Isle of Wight)
    1765–1768
    With: William Rawlinson Earle
    Succeeded by

    John Eames
    Hans Sloane

    Preceded by

    William Strode
    Jervoise Clarke

    Member of Parliament for Yarmouth (Isle of Wight)
    1769–1774
    With: Major General the Hon. George Lane Parker
    Succeeded by

    Edward Meux Worsley
    Jervoise Clarke Jervoise

    Preceded by

    James Hayes
    Thomas Duncombe

    Member of Parliament for Downton
    1774–1775
    With: Thomas Duncombe
    Succeeded by

    John Cooper
    Sir Philip Hales

    Preceded by

    Joseph Bullock
    Henry Drummond

    Member of Parliament for Wendover
    1775–1780
    With: Henry Drummond
    Succeeded by

    Richard Smith
    John Mansell Smith

    Preceded by

    Edward Morant
    Henry Goodricke

    Member of Parliament for Lymington
    1780–1781
    With: Captain Harry Burrard
    Succeeded by

    Edward Gibbon
    Captain Harry Burrard


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thomas_Dummer&oldid=1223615560"

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    This page was last edited on 13 May 2024, at 08:18 (UTC).

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